Work done on/by hydrogen gas

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
The figure shows a thermodynamic process followed by 1.80×10−2 mol of hydrogen.

How much work is done on the gas?
By how much does the thermal energy of the gas change?
How much heat energy is transferred to the gas?

The attempt at a solution
I thought the work done to gas should be negative the area underneath the curve, which is
W= [(300-100)*0.001L * (4-1)atm] = (3 atm * 0.2L)/2 = 0.3 L*atm = 0.3*101.3 J = 30.39 J
apparently that is neither here nor there

Also, the thermal energy of the gas change would be the same as the amount of work done on the gas plus heat energy transferred to the gas, is that correct?

How much work is done on the gas?
By how much does the thermal energy of the gas change?
How much heat energy is transferred to the gas?
…
Also, the thermal energy of the gas change would be the same as the amount of work done on the gas plus heat energy transferred to the gas, is that correct?

I got the work done by calculating area under the curve which is -50.7J
I also calculated the temperature change delta T= T1-T2 = nR/(p1V1-p2V2)= -67.75K
I also tried specific heat, which q= Cq * n* delta T = 28.82 J/mol*K * 1.8*10^-2 mol * 67.2585 K = -35.1 J
But that wasn't the answer
I don't know where to go from here
Thanks so much for your help

I got the work done by calculating area under the curve which is -50.7J
I also calculated the temperature change delta T= T1-T2 = nR/(p1V1-p2V2)= -67.75K
I also tried specific heat, which q= Cq * n* delta T = 28.82 J/mol*K * 1.8*10^-2 mol * 67.2585 K = -35.1 J
But that wasn't the answer
I don't know where to go from here
Thanks so much for your help

I'm stuck on this one myself but one thing I know is that the specific heat is the piece of knowledge missing here since the values for the specific heat one can look up are either c_p(for constant pressure) or c_v (for constant volume) and this problem has neither constant volume nor pressure.

In just talked to someone about this apparently you use C_v to find the change in thermal energy. So it is just a matter of finding the two temperatures T=PV/nR then the change in temperature T_1-T_2. Then applying (delta)E_th=n*C_v*(delta)T